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6 Reviews
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Aniara--Epic story of man's fragility and folly,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Aniara: An Epic Science Fiction Poem (Paperback)
After more than twenty years of searching for an English translation of this poem, I finally have had the great fortune to obtain a copy!This is the 24-year story of how the 8,000 inhabitants of a doomed 'space ark' try to cope with their hopeless situation. It is a dark review of the human condition, sometimes difficult, often beautiful. The introduction and translator's notes are a must-read. Strangely, there is no mention at all of the 'modern' opera by Karl-Birger Blohmdahl (the only true 'space opera'?) which is how most non-Swedes have been introduced to Aniara for many decades. The Aniara Suite was featured as side 2 of a very rare release of the "2001..." soundtrack years ago. If still available, the 1985 Caprice 2-CD set (CAP 22016 1-2) is an excellent companion to this book.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Aniara is an excellent piece of art,
By A Customer
This review is from: Aniara: An Epic Science Fiction Poem (Paperback)
This review is based on the Swedish version since the English is not yet in print at the time of writing. Aniara is a poetic tale of a spaceship with the same name. Aniara is lost in space, headed out of our solarsystem, and beyond all rescue. Experience the frustration, fear, and yearning for confort that the passangers feel, in this fantastic poem.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
strangely beautiful,
This review is from: Aniara: An Epic Science Fiction Poem (Paperback)
Martinson's epic poem is composed of separate episodes which form distinct and richly resonant threads in a tapestry of voices, each clearly and palpably real. The language has a range similar to that of the composer, Mahler, delving fearlessly into the plain, the sparse, even the tacky, pausing there only to soar with equal courage into the shatteringly beautiful. Suffused throughout with a combination of subtle insight and deep compassion, the work is deeply moving as only great things are. Any concern that an "epic poem" or "science fiction" are not for you should be gently set aside. Pick a starry window on a quiet night and read this book.
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Only science ficton book to receive a Nobel prize,
By isala "Isabel and Lars" (London, England) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Aniara: An Epic Science Fiction Poem (Paperback)
Harry Martinson's epos Aniar should rank as one of last century's most beatiful books. Written already in the fifties, but still as actual as ever. A spaceship carrying refigees from Earth to Mars. It's steering is damaged by a meteorite. Helpless, the refugees follow the spaceship out into the cold voids outside of our solar system. They die of hopelessness when they understand that twenty years of travel has only brought them a few light-days away from Earth ("A lightyear is a grave").
Martinson invented new words to describe the technology, all of them beatiful. The translation works just great. Part of Martinson's greatness is that he saw that we were heading in the wrong direction much earlier than his contemporaries; either stuck in the "American Dream" or trapped by "Soviet Progressive" ideals. The book cn be read in so many planes: belief in technology while forgetting human values, fear of nuclear war, shallow searches for instant gratification, man's - and mankind's - loneliness in an uncaring universe. Martinson was an apostate from communism, and he was ostracised by the Swedish intellectual establishment, and later commited suicide.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Wow. You know... Wow.,
By The Nothing Man (Sweden) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Aniara: An Epic Science Fiction Poem (Paperback)
Aniara, by Harry Martinsson, is about a space ship which is damaged, in such a way that the people travelling with it can no longer control where they are going. This makes for a fascinating read, unlike anything you have ever read. The main problem about Aniara is that noone can tell you what it is like, you have to see for yourself. Trying to describe Aniara is like telling you what a song sounds like whitout singing: You either get the wrong impression or don't get it at all. You have to experience it by yourself.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Brilliant Epic Poem,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Aniara: A Review of Man in Time and Space (Hardcover)
Aniara is an epic poem written by the Swedish Nobel laureate Harry Martinson. It describes the journey of a spaceship carrying emigrants from a radiation-blasted Earth. The ship is knocked off course and flung into the void of space, without any hope of returning to Earth or reaching a safe berth.
The poem is a dark and haunting study of human behaviour in the confines of what is essentially a prison in which every prisoner is denied parole; the inhabitants of Aniara know that the Earth and civilization exist, but know also that they can never rejoin them. Martinson's description of how the passengers cope with the existential struggle into which they have been thrust is poignant, and his ideas are supported by his lyrical skill with language. Calling this poem one of the most magnificent pieces of science fictional literature ever produced is to damn it with faint praise, for it transcends in every way the trite cliches and hackneyed prose that embody most works of that nature. Anyone with even a faint interest in poetry should read Aniara and drink deep of its beauty. Something else worth noting is that Aniara has been adapted into an opera by Karl-Birger Blomdahl, which is in itself a fine piece of music and well worth looking up. |
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Aniara: An Epic Science Fiction Poem by Harry Martinson (Paperback - September 1, 1998)
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